Preclinical evaluation of the epithelial sodium channel inhibitor AZD5634 and implications on human translation

上皮钠通道抑制剂 AZD5634 的临床前评估及其对人类翻译的影响

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作者:Annika Åstrand, Emily Falk Libby, Ren-Jay Shei, Jacelyn E Peabody Lever, Niroop Kaza, Adegboyega Timothy Adewale, Evan Boitet, Lloyd Edwards, Martin Hemmerling, James Root, Botilda Lindberg, Cecilia Wingren, Anna Malmgren, Juan Sabater, Steven M Rowe

Abstract

Airway dehydration causes mucus stasis and bacterial overgrowth in cystic fibrosis (CF), resulting in recurrent respiratory infections and exacerbations. Strategies to rehydrate airway mucus including inhibition of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) have the potential to improve mucosal defense by enhancing mucociliary clearance (MCC) and reducing the risk of progressive decline in lung function. In the current work, we evaluated the effects of AZD5634, an ENaC inhibitor that shows extended lung retention and safety profile as compared with previously evaluated candidate drugs, in healthy and CF preclinical model systems. We found that AZD5634 elicited a potent inhibition of amiloride-sensitive current in non-CF airway cells and airway cells derived from F508del-homozygous individuals with CF that effectively increased airway surface liquid volume and improved mucociliary transport (MCT) rate. AZD5634 also demonstrated efficacious inhibition of ENaC in sheep bronchial epithelial cells, translating to dose-dependent improvement of mucus clearance in healthy sheep in vivo. Conversely, nebulization of AZD5634 did not notably improve airway hydration or MCT in CF rats that exhibit an MCC defect, consistent with findings from a first single-dose evaluation of AZD5634 on MCC in people with CF. Overall, these findings suggest that CF animal models demonstrating impaired mucus clearance translatable to the human situation may help to successfully predict and promote the successful translation of ENaC-directed therapies to the clinic.

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